*-*-*-*-* Ninth Annual Arthropod Genomics Symposium*-*-*-*-*-

June 17 to 19, 2015

Kansas State University

Manhattan, Kansas

Symposium Website:  www.ksu.edu/agc<http://www.ksu.edu/agc>



HOTEL ROOMS: Deadline to reserve within the room block is Wednesday, May 20. A 
block of rooms has been reserved at the

 Holiday Inn Manhattan at the 
Campus<http://www.ihg.com/holidayinn/hotels/us/en/manhattan/manhi/hoteldetail>.

RESIDENCE HALL LODGING: The reservation system is now online and ready to 
accept your reservation!!!  Please reserve your room before May 20, 2015.  
Rooms will be available in Moore Hall on the Kansas State University campus for 
the nights of June 16 - 20 at the rate of $35/night for a single room; 
$27/night for a double room. Detailed information regarding the dormitory guest 
housing can be found at:
           http://housing.k-state.edu/guest-housing/guest/index.html.

To reserve a room, visit:
     https://apps2.housing.k-state.edu/guest/step1.php.
In the box asking you to "Please specify any special housing arrangements, 
comments, or questions,"please enter: Arthropod Genomics Symposium.



ABSTRACT DEADLINES

Wednesday, May 20 - If you DO wish to present a poster during the Symposium.

Wednesday, May 20 -  If you DO wish your abstract to be considered for a poster 
presentation at the IGTRCN pre-meeting workshop.

(March 9 was the deadline for abstracts to be considered for oral presentations 
at the symposium.)



REGISTRATION DEADLINES

Please register online at the Symposium website,

www.k-state.edu/agc<http://www.k-state.edu/agc/symposium_level/index.html>!

June 5 is the deadline for general registration.



SPEAKERS   (Presentation titles are on the Speaker page of the website.)

Keynote Speaker:  David A. O’Brochta, Institute for Bioscience and 
Biotechnology Research & Department of Entomology, University of Maryland 
College Park



Featured Speakers:

+Michelle Cilia, USDA-ARS, Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, Cornell 
University, USA

+Martin J. Donnelly, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and the Wellcome 
Trust Sanger Institute, UK

+Rosemary G. Gillespie, University of California, Berkeley, USA

+Sijun Liu, Iowa State University, USA

+Frank Lyko, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany

+Duane McKenna, University of Memphis, USA

+Armin P. Moczek, Indiana University, USA

+Amanda J. Moehring, Western University, Ontario, Canada

+Daniel E. Neafsey, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University, USA

+Greg Ragland, Kansas State University, USA

+Anne-Nathalie Volkoff, INRA (UMR1333), Montpellier 1 University, France



The symposium focuses on new insights gleaned from analyzing arthropod genomes 
and is designed for scientists interested in genomic studies of Arthropods, 
both model organisms and those of agricultural or health relevance. The program 
will include platform presentations, welcome reception, Genome Train Workshop, 
Annotation Café, and arthropod genomics-related poster sessions. A few poster 
abstract submissions will be selected for platform presentations. Postdoctoral, 
graduate, and undergraduate students are also encouraged to attend.  Sessions 
conclude Friday evening, followed by an optional evening at Konza Prairie with 
dinner and live music by the

Red State Blues Band<http://www.redstatebluesband.com/>.



*-*-*-*-* Pre-Symposium Workshop *-*-*-*-*-

INSECT GENETIC TECHNOLOGY workshop

June 17, 2015 (Wednesday morning and afternoon)

Robust protocols to manipulate genes and genomes have not yet been developed 
for most insects other than Drosophila melanogaster, and this shortfall is 
limiting research progress in many aspects of arthropod genomics.  The NSF-RCN 
on Insect Genetic Technologies (IGTRCN: 2014-2019; igtrcn.org) seeks to remedy 
this problem by facilitating the communication of best practice and new 
techniques among arthropod genomicists.



This IGTRCN-sponsored workshop will comprise (1) talks that showcase the latest 
genetic technologies, (2) discussion sessions for exchange of ideas and 
solutions for effective insect genetic engineering, and (3) posters.  Proposals 
from the workshop will be integrated into the IGTRCN program of hands-on 
practical workshops, fellowships, and the IGTRCN KnowledgeBase.  Early-career 
researchers are particularly encouraged to present their research at this 
workshop.  A limited number of travel grants to attend the workshop are 
available for early stage investigators. Application deadline was March 9.  For 
more information on poster abstract and travel grant submission for the 
workshop, go to

     http://www.k-state.edu/agc/symposium_level/workshop/index.html.





GENOME TRAIN WORKSHOP

Join us for a journey on The Genome Train on Thursday, June 18th, 7:00 pm to 
8:30 p.m.



Genome Train is a participatory workshop on genomics training where we will 
first introduce the main considerations for each stage of a genome sequencing 
project and then break off into groups to focus on:

[1] experimental design,
[2] genome assembly & quality assessment,
[3] automated genome annotation,
[4] manual curation of gene models,
[5] automated & manual assessment of gene function,
[6] dissemination, maintenance & improvement of genome resources.



We will then reconvene to compare notes and finish off by focusing on
station [4] to lead logically on to the Annotation Café. Please sign up

     
here<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1PpCtIHTOlk9Sp_7i2T3rQt1dy_uAduIg91EJYLd7I6U/viewform?c=0&w=1>.





ANNOTATION CAFÉ

The i5k Workspace@NAL and the Web Apollo development team are hosting an 
Annotation Café during poster sessions where both experienced and novice 
annotators can ask questions to an expert, share curation advice with other 
annotators, or chat with scientists from the National Agricultural Library and 
Web Apollo teams about the annotation services they provide.



TENTATIVE PROGRAM for SYMPOSIUM & WORKSHOPS:

View the

     complete 
schedule<http://www.k-state.edu/agc/images/symposium/AGC_Schedule_A.pdf> 
(subject to change) for additional information.



VENUE:  The 2015 Symposium is being hosted by the Arthropod Genomics Center at 
Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas.  Symposium sessions will be held 
at the K-State Alumni Center on campus located at the corner of Anderson and 
17th Street. If you are arranging travel/flights, try MHK first to fly directly 
into Manhattan.  Manhattan is approximately a 2 ½-hour drive west from Kansas 
City International airport (MCI).


QUESTIONS:  Contact Doris Merrill at [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.



If you would like to join the ArthropodNews listserv to ensure receiving future 
notices, please send an e-mail with your name and e-mail address to 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.



PLEASE SHARE THIS ANNOUNCEMENT WITH COLLEAGUES AND STUDENTS!



SPONSORS:

*Arthropod Genomics Center, Kansas State University

*Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame

*Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign



CORPORATE SPONSORS:

BASF Corporation

Monsanto Company



ADDITIONAL SPONSORS:

K-State Division of Biology

K-INBRE



2015 SYMPOSIUM ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:

At Kansas State University:

Susan J. Brown, Chair, Professor in the Division of Biology and Director, 
Arthropod Genomics Center

Kristin Michel, Division of Biology

Subbaratnam Muthukrishnan, Department of Biochemistry

Yoonseong Park, Department of Entomology

Gregory Ragland, Department of Entomology

Anna Whitfield, Department of Plant Pathology



At University of Notre Dame:

Mary Ann McDowell, Department of Biological Sciences, Eck Institute for Global 
Health

Molly Duman Scheel, Indiana University School of Medicine-South Bend, Eck 
Institute for Global Health



At University of Illinois:  Hugh Robertson, Department of Entomology



by

Doris Merrill, Event Coordinator

K-State Arthropod Genomics Center

Division of Biology, Kansas State University

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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